defranks
Silver Member
I'm 64 and have been riding on the street since I was 18, and on dirt bikes previous to that. My observation has been the brand of bike has little to do with how safe or unsafe a rider is. There was a time when HD riders were generally pretty good riders, they were at the top of the heap for performance in the 60's and 70's. But since they became mainstream I see a lot of really poor riders on Harleys. You'll see these folks on a brand new shiny bike with their leather fringe riding gear and they wobble through the curves, "paddle" as they leave a stop light, and never use the front brake. You also see guys with very little riding experience who hop on a brand new 600 or 750cc sport bike that's way beyond their riding ability. Way back when I started riding, most of us started on 350's or 400's and then worked our way up to higher performance bikes. At some point one begins to have a pretty good feel for defensive riding and can anticipate sketchy situations in time to avoid them.
I spent 23 years as a volunteer fire fighter, and I'm here to tell you that the most common air transport customers aren't bike riders, they're car-accident victims. There are FAR more people injured in car wrecks (due to far fewer people being on bikes) than on motorcycles. Yeah, when I'm in my F250 I sit high and have a lot of steel around me and seat belt on. But when I'm on my bike I have better braking, better acceleration, and better maneuverability, which increases my chance of avoiding a wreck entirely.
The wheelie guy in the video was stoopid, but he was dressed right and no one ran over him. The fall from a bike isn't the problem, you might lose some skin sliding down the road, but that's usually the worst of it. Being run over or stopping suddenly against a car or a tree is the problem. I've had several high-speed falls on race tracks, one at 140 or so when I hit oil, and have never lost any fluids or broken any hard parts of my body. I know it can happen, but my personal risk-benefit analysis comes down solidly on the side of riding.... a lot.
I spent 23 years as a volunteer fire fighter, and I'm here to tell you that the most common air transport customers aren't bike riders, they're car-accident victims. There are FAR more people injured in car wrecks (due to far fewer people being on bikes) than on motorcycles. Yeah, when I'm in my F250 I sit high and have a lot of steel around me and seat belt on. But when I'm on my bike I have better braking, better acceleration, and better maneuverability, which increases my chance of avoiding a wreck entirely.
The wheelie guy in the video was stoopid, but he was dressed right and no one ran over him. The fall from a bike isn't the problem, you might lose some skin sliding down the road, but that's usually the worst of it. Being run over or stopping suddenly against a car or a tree is the problem. I've had several high-speed falls on race tracks, one at 140 or so when I hit oil, and have never lost any fluids or broken any hard parts of my body. I know it can happen, but my personal risk-benefit analysis comes down solidly on the side of riding.... a lot.